Bushra 7 PDF
Bushra 7 PDF
Bushra 7 PDF
1. Did you enjoy the books? If so, why? If not, why not?
2. Have you read either book before? If you have not, did the books mirror the image you had from
popular culture?
3. Alice is well known even among people who have not read the books. There have been many movies
and many TV shows with Alice parodies or references. Some examples of well-known ideas from
the books include going down the rabbit hole, a white rabbit with a watch, the Cheshire Cat who
can disappear bit by bit until only his smile is left, the riddle why is a raven like a writing desk,
curiouser and curiouser, the eating of the mushroom and other items to alter ones size, the Walrus
and the Carpenter, and the cry, Off with their heads! Why is Alice such a popular cultural icon?
5. Traditionally, Alices Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass are considered
stories for children. What do you think?
6. Since their publication, some readers have found material in Carrolls book unsuitable for children.
Are parts of the Alice books unfit for or harmful to children today?
7. Alice Liddell, the model for Carrolls heroine, was a young child when these stories were first told.
Although a child in the story, Alice often exhibits mature characteristics, and the adult characters
often exhibit childish behavior. Do you consider these books to be an adults view of childhood, or a
childs view of adulthood?
8. Alice rarely speaks nonsense and rarely enjoys it when it is spoken to her. In fact, her speech and
manners are as proper as those of any Jane Austen heroine. How is Alices perception of the world
changed when confronted with the world and characters of nonsense?
9. The Cheshire Cat suggests that everything Alice experiences in Wonderland is a dream or the result
of madness. Besides the obvious absurdities in imagery, what other aspects of these books mimic a
dream state?
10. Take care of the sense, and the sounds will take care of themselves. This play on the proverb
Take care of the pence and the pounds will take care of themselves is a good example of Carrolls
word play. Often these word plays end up with a nonsensical locution, but at other times, they create
a completely different, often subversive, meaning. Did you like the word play?
11. Throughout her adventures, Alice grapples with her identity. What philosophical issues about
identity does Alice raise?
12. Alice usually exhibits a passivity to the incomprehensible events around her. However, at critical times,
she learns to assume control of her circumstances. What message does that send to the reader?
13. What is the significance of the mushroom that Alice eats during her adventures?
14. Lets assume that in Lewis Carrolls original telling of these stories, he viewed himself as a
teacher/mentor to Alice Liddell. How do the ways in which the fictional Alice adapts to her shifting
and unusual circumstances translate into meaningful lessons for a child of Alice Liddells age?
15. If the Caterpillar from Alices Adventures in Wonderland were to give advice to Tweedledee and
Tweedledum from Through the Looking-Glass on how to solve their differences without having a
bit of a fight, what might the Caterpillar advise?
16. What role does fantasy and imagination play in our lives?
[from chapter III, after Alice and some animals get wet in the tears she shed when she was a giant]
[Alice] felt sure she would catch a bad cold if she did not get dry very soon.
Ahem! said the Mouse with an important air, are you all ready? This is the driest thing I know.
Silence all round, if you please! William the Conqueror, whose cause was favored by the pope, was
soon submitted to by the English, who wanted leaders, and had been of late much accustomed to
usurpation and conquest. Edwin and Morcar, the earls of Mercia and Northumbria
How are you getting on now, my dear? it continued, turning to Alice as he spoke.
As wet as ever, said Alice in a melancholy tone: it doesnt seem to dry me at all.